- [Instructor] To start testing,…we are going to create a Xamarin UI test project…for our iOS app.…To do that, we right click on the solution…and go to add and new project.…Under iOS test,…we can choose to create a UI test application,…click next and we'll call this VSACXamarin.UITest.iOS…and we'll press create to create the project.…

We want to make sure this project gets built…as part of the QA configuration.…So we're going to right click on the solution…and go to options…and under configurations, configuration mappings.…We'll click QA…and make sure our UI test projects…is being built under QA and iPhone.…As you can see here,…it is being built along with our iOS application.…So we're just going to press OK.…

We also need to update the UI test nougat package…as the one on the template is old…and will not run on the current simulators.…So we're going to go into packages…and right click on Xamarin UI test and update.…Make sure you do not update the N unit package.…If you update this package, your test will fail.…It has to be an earlier version.…

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Released

3/13/2018

Visual Studio App Center brings together multiple tools used by mobile developers-tools for testing, deployment, distribution, reporting, and analytics-into a single, unified product. It integrates with popular repositories such as GitHub and supports platforms such as React Native, Swift, Android Java, and Xamarin. Join instructor Kevin Ford as he shows how to use VSAC to create and customize builds, run automated UI testing, distribute builds, monitor the health and usage of apps, and send users push notifications. Plus, learn how to update applications without distributing new releases. Using the features in VSAC, you can improve your app development workflow and your users' experience.